New service Mylio offers to synchronize your photographic life

Mylio, a subscription-based photo organization and storage program, is making a debut at this year's PhotoPlus Expo in new York. Created by MyLO, a Bellevue, Washington-based company, Mylio offers cross-device access to a user's collection of photos, without them having to change their storage structure. The software makes photos available for viewing and editing on a desktop, laptop, phone or mobile device, with edits synced between devices, and original files backed up in several places in an effort to keep them safe.

Mylio offers three subscription plans:

Basic Plan: $50/year for JPEG only, three devices, up to 50,000 images

Standard Plan: $100/year JPEG and Raw, image editing options, five devices and up to 100,000 images

Advanced Plan: $250/year for multiple locations, 10 devices and up to 500,000 images

Mac computers running OSX 10.8 or later are supported, as are PCs with Windows 7 and 8. An app for iPad, iPhone and iPod Touch is available for those devices running iOS 7 or later. There’s currently no Android app but that’s expected to change in 2015.

If this sounds familiar, you may be thinking of Adobe's Revel service (previously Carousel). Revel offers cloud storage with a similar cross-platform approach, with in-app editing tools available. Revel provides 2GB of space for free, or unlimited storage with a $5.99/month premium account. The differences between the two are in storage - Revel requires images to be uploaded to Adobe's cloud service, where Mylio does not over any cloud storage at all.

In use

It’s important to note that Mylio isn’t an answer to a storage problem. If you have photos spread across various USB thumb drives and memory cards scattered through your desk drawers and no storage space for them, Mylio cannot help. That's your responsibility. While there is a cloud component to the service, it’s more of a go-between and a backup option for the system rather than a primary storage location for your actual images. Mylio is designed to work with an existing storage structure, not replace it.

Getting started means registering an account with Mylio and downloading the app and/or software to whichever devices you’d like it to sync with. I downloaded Mylio to my work Mac running OS X 10.9.5 and my iPhone 5 running iOS 7 without any problems.

From there, the harder work begins. The initial setup requires a bit of a time investment, proportional of course to the size of your image library and the complexity of your storage systems. Importing photos from Facebook and Flickr is a matter of inputing your credentials for those accounts as prompted, selecting the albums to import (or simply selecting 'all') and waiting as they’re gathered.

Mylio’s desktop software includes an image window with tools for importing images on the left and a number of informational tabs on the right. Clicking the icons brings up information such as sync settings, metadata and location.

Not every image downloaded to Mylio is saved in its full size on every one of your devices - this would be disastrous for example on a low-capacity smartphone. Instead, Mylio creates 'preview' and 'thumbnail' sizes in addition to your original file, and those are saved to devices that the user specifies. By default, a mobile device will save only thumbnails locally to avoid taking up too much space, but this can be managed in the 'sync' pane of the software.

The green bars indicate which devices contain originals, thumbnails and previews. This photo is backed up on my desktop and in the cloud, with a thumbnail available on my phone.

Photos on your computer’s hard drive or on a connected storage device can be imported in a couple of ways. It’s possible to ‘add’ folders or ‘copy’ folders into Mylio, a distinction which may not be immediately apparent but is an important one. Copying folders bring them into Mylio, creating a separate version in Mylio’s directory. Adding folders keeps photos in their original location, so any changes made to the photos within Mylio will be reflected in their original location as well. A third option is to 'move' a folder, which removes the files from their original location and brings them completely into Mylio.

Provided you’ve got the Mylio app running on your mobile device (iOS only for now) you can sync the contents of your phone or tablet’s camera roll with Mylio. If you’ve got a lot of photos on your phone this can take quite a while, and the Mylio app needs to be open the whole time. Additionally, anytime in the future you want to sync up your mobile photos with Mylio you’ll need to open up the app again, as it doesn’t sync up photos automatically behind the scenes.

Photos arrive in Mylio with metadata, viewable in the ‘info’ pane on the righthand side of the screen. Along with metadata, Mylio will pull in names of the people it finds tagged in photos, as well as any star ratings added in outside software like Lightroom. Mylio honors your own storage structure, but also offers ‘albums’ as a way to organize photos across all of your imported folders. You can also add keywords and ratings within Mylio. This data can be used to filter through images.

Mylio offers some basic photo editing tools, but this will depend on the plan you've signed up for. The basic plan offers simple editing tools and only JPEGs, so working with thumbnails on your mobile device will only yield options for basic retouching like cropping and rotating. Edits are saved as 'sidecar' files, meaning that although you'll see an edited image in its adjusted state, the original file is not materially altered. Standard and Advanced plans provide more editing tools and also make it possible to edit Raw files.

Mylio offers basic editing features. Edits can be applied to thumbnail and original images through the desktop app, and depending on your subscription level, edits will be made to Raw files rather than JPEGs where possible.

First Impressions

After using Mylio for a couple of weeks, I’ve been able to see it in action. I’m not a power user by any means, and my test drive of the service was of around only 1200 photos - some from Flickr, Facebook, my desktop hard drive, my iPhone camera roll, and from a server at work.

Every photo I’ve taken for a camera review in the past year at DPReview is stored in a central location, and I definitely don’t need access to all of that all the time. So Mylio comes in handy for grabbing the standout photos from each of those sets, saving the originals in a couple of locations, and giving me quick access to them on my phone and desktop.

While a lot of my photos are organized by camera review, the effect would be pretty much the same for photographers who organize photos by date or the trip taken. Instead of those photos living only on a hard drive at home, Mylio helps back them up across multiple devices and make them available wherever you go. Depending on your catalog, this could include every photo or just the 'greatest hits' from any given set.

Mylio is an ambitious program - providing organization and backup across many devices requires a flexible piece of software, and in my testing Mylio was very responsive. Updates made to folders on my phone were reflected on the desktop software almost instantly, and vice versa.

It's important to note that Mylio requires a good deal of legwork initially, both in getting photos imported and configuring sync settings to your liking. Once that's out of the way it's fun to play with, but depending on your catalog, setup could take a couple of days to get right. Cost is another consideration - Mylio's Standard Plan is $30 more expensive than Adobe's Premium plan, and the latter offers unlimited photo storage.

It's possible that the kind of people to whom Mylio might naturally appeal - i.e., slightly disorganized new photographers trying to take some control over their growing library - will be a little put off by the setup process and might also baulk at $50 per year.

Mylio is definitely worth a test run for a photographer who already has a great storage system in place and is looking for quick access to more of his or her photos. As we've already stated, Mylio isn't a storage service, but acts rather a coordinator of your own storage devices. Inevitably, someone without that storage structure in place may not find Mylio as useful as it can be. It's also worth remembering that we've looked at Mylio in its first iteration, and we'll be watching to see how it evolves.

Comments

The scanty info we have so far indicates that this is the direction Apple is going with Photos - RAW editing and syncing to OS X and iOS versions of Photos via iCloud. I just got my first iPad in anticipation of such a cross-platform workflow solution so that I can cull, rank & organize photos from a job on the iPad while I'm still on the road, then seamlessly transition to my Mac on return to my office for adjustments & delivery. Of particular interest to me is Apple's forthcoming extensible RAW engine, which will give 3rd-party tools direct access to the RAW pipeline. I think this is why Apple is dropping Aperture: why should Apple build NR, perspective correction, lens correction, album layout and other tools, when 3rd-party devs can deliver them as extensions? It could really be a best-of-all-worlds a la carte solution where we can choose our favorite tools and have them all work seamlessly together without doing the TIF-export-round-trip shuffle.

Saw this advertised in Pop Photo so I went to the Mylio website to find out more. I found no concise description of what exactly this service offers and no "contact" link to ask (maybe I missed it). After reading the comments here, I can tell I'm not alone in failing to understand exactly what this is and why I would want to fork over my money.

From what I can tell there are some editing capabilities though I'm not sure why their target market would want to do even basic editing outside of their primary editing software. It would just confuse things.

It looks like there is no cloud storage involved so it syncs between the users own storage devices. GoodSync does this already for free (or BackBlaze if you want cloud storage). If I want to access images remotely from my home or work Synology Diskstations there is a free app for that (though there is no conversion or scaling that I am aware of).

I have been using this Mylio in beta for several months now. Here are some observations and thoughts:

- Mylio is a new photographic paradigm. It is not a cloud backup service. It offers a cloud component, but that is a very small piece of what it does (you can back-up full RAW files to the cloud, not just Thumbs). It will backup and sync all of your images to local storage, offsite storage and IOS device (Android soon).

- The product has been extremely stable, and the UI, is well designed and elegant.

-The integration with Light Room is excellent, so you have the benefit of having a great image management system with the editing tool you may already be using.

-It seamlessly integrates and organizes all of your images, from all of your devices into three views - People, Calendar and Location.

It is the most elegant image management systems that I have ever tried (and I have tried quite a few).

If you are in doubt, download their free trial to see what it really does.

I shoot jpg but edit and fix and save as psd in CS, uncompressed ! This Mylio needs to get up to speed with full sized files with other file types. Pics saved in TIFF for publication also need to be seen and noticed. I would love to cross connect my 2 computers in two locations with all my external hard drives to see all photos in all locations on any computer. Sounds like a dream not yet fully realized.

Sorry, I don't. I don't really do much of anything with Apple products.

But what you describe is pretty easy to do on an android tablet/home computer. I'm sure Apple has similar options. I would assume bitorrent sync has an apple app. If you can transfer your pictures from your camera to your tablet, then you can transfer them on to your home computer with that.

As for selecting/editing/ranking, you can do it on your apple tablet if you have an app for it. Or you can transfer all of the pictures to your home computer first, then play with them by directly accessing the remote computer on your tablet via Splashtop or some lesser VNC application.

How do you do this and make it SEAMLESS? Could you describe in more detail the workflow you're alluding to? And, does it work with RAW files? I don't want to rank in one app on a tablet, then have to export into separate folders, then transfer to computer and have to reimport the folders into yet another app. I want a way to rank on the tablet, then put it down and immediately start retouching on the computer. And, I want to then be able to pick up my tablet and have ALL that work accessible on it so that I can share the finished images online at any time from anywhere. That's what I mean by seamless, and that's where Apple seems to be headed with Continuity and Handoff.

The cost is negligible next to the time to upload, structure and manage - I have tried a few solutions that did not work, didn't sync. I still use google picasa/picasaweb for it's speed and ease - perhaps not the best professional solution, but for my 600gb of 120k photos and 360gb of video's it's easy and has mobile support along with extra space for Google drive files all for $10/mo for 1tb of space. Not a Google rep, but it has worked for 6 years for me now.

Maybe, the article isn't the best introduction to what Mylio is about.

But still, I am wondering what could be the value proposition above, say SmugMug with its LR sync plugin and SmugView iOS app which is improving nicely recently. The latter is cheaper, with unlimited storage, very stable and trusted and much richer on features, yet easier to use.

While the article isn't entirely clear on what is stored in the 'cloud', I get the impression that it's just thumbnails and metadata. So you wouldn't loose your images, just the organisation work you did and the metadata.

Possibly they sync the metadata locally too so you wouldn't even loose that? But I'm not sure how useful that would be to have unless they're using an existing schema(s) (such as Adobe's) for storing the metadata.

While it is subscription based, if you use it properly, you can back-up all your images locally to multiple drives and never touch the cloud. I set up an old PC with a 3TB drive at my daughter's house, remote location. 24x7, any image I take on any device, or upload to Light Room, is automatically shuttled to 3 different drives (2 local). If the worst case happened, and they went belly up (which I would not expect), all of your files are stored in file that can be accessed using your operating system or Lightroom.

Personally the initiation phase was painless.

The non-power user version, delivers quite a bit of punch for a relatively low annual cost.

Just one photographer's opinion - I have been testing thee product for several months.

It replicates locally as well as to the cloud. I am not sure the trial version has cloud backup as part of the package and I know it limits you to 1000 images. But you will see how it does exactly what you are hoping for.

One other aspect of the cloud syncing that I like, rather than back up everything to the cloud, I can selectively back up some items to the cloud (i.e. 5 star images, images with certain key words, etc.

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